Yesterday evening in London (and at 4pm Eastern time), I was delighted to be interviewed by Kristine Frazao, via Skype, for the news on RT (Russia Today) from Washington D.C., and specifically for an eight-minute feature entitled, “In Limbo at Gitmo,” which is available below. (Click to enlarge the photo on the left, showing me addressing campaigners for the closure of Guantánamo outside the Supreme Court, on the 10th anniversary of the opening of the prison, on January 11 this year, and see here for a video of my talk).

As I was able to explain, this led to the release of a few dozen prisoners between December 2008 and July 2010, after their habeas corpus petitions were granted by District Court judges in Washington D.C., who correctly perceived that the government’s evidence was, in many cases, risibly weak, consisting of dubious intelligence reports and the testimony of other prisoners — either in Guantánamo or in secret CIA torture prisons — whose statements were fundamentally unreliable, and whose unreliability had, in many case, been noted by US officials, even though that was ignored by prosecutors in the Justice Department and by advisors in the Pentagon.

However, since summer 2010, right-wing judges in the D.C. Circuit Court have been rewriting the rules governing the habeas petitions, gutting habeas corpus of all meaning for the Guantánamo prisoners, so that none of the prisoners have had their habeas petitions granted in the last two years. The Supreme Court had the opportunity to redress this shameful distortion of its 2008 ruling in Boumediene v. Bush, and their failure, as I also explained to Kristine, means that the Guantánamo prisoners have now been abandoned by every branch of the US government, as President Obama has backed away from his promise to close the prison, and has shown a persistent lack of political courage on issues relating to Guantánamo, and lawmakers in Congress have also indulged in disgraceful fearmongering, passing legislation that, like the D.C. Circuit’s decisions, is also designed to prevent any prisoners from being released.

On the fourth anniversary of Boumediene v. Bush, this is a truly depressing state of affairs, and one made all the more depressing because of the general indifference of the US media and the American people, and I hope my contribution, and RT’s interest in the story, will help people to understand how depressing it is that the men in Guantánamo have been so shamefully failed by all three branches of the US government.

Thanks, Ralph, Bill and Toia. It was a good interview I thought, and I was also pleased to have been asked about the Supreme Court’s disgraceful decision – today – not to revive habeas corpus for the Guantanamo prisoners by throwing out rulings by the outrageous right-wing judges of the D.C. Circuit Court, who have gutted the Supreme Court’s ruling of all meaning over the last two years.

Thanks, Toia and Joyce – and everyone who has liked and shared this. We have reached the lowest point on Guantanamo, that’s for sure, and the fact that this has happened three and half years into Obama’s Presidency is shameful. Hopefully we can use the disgraceful combination of factors – the failures of the administration, Congress and the courts to do what is right and what is necessary – to revive the campaign to close Guantanamo.

the problem is the average person sees these folks as not human.
We must make them real. Humanize them. Our country is so racist. I believe racism is necessary for us to wage these wars and falsely imprison innocents.

Yes, humanizing the prisoners is what I’m constantly trying to do, Joyce. I think we’re getting there slowly. Please do encourage anyone who might be interested in knowing more to join the “Close Guantanamo” campaign: http://www.closeguantanamo.org/Join-Us

We constantly need to show the administration officials, lawmakers and judges that we care about their disgraceful abdication of responsibility, Paula, and petitions are undoubtedly a part of this. But we also need more media awareness, and more people generally talking about the injustice of Guantanamo with their friends and family to raise awareness that the prison must be closed.

Yes, this is truly the lowest point thus far. The liberals who back Obama no matter what are complicit now in this. ScotusBlog made it clear that it was quite likely that Elena Kagan was involved in this decision not to hear these cases.

… and Democracy Now! today, Jeff. I’ll be posting that tomorrow. The only conceivable way that this can be turned to the advantage of those with the good sense to realize that the pressure to close Guantanamo must be maintained is that it’s now easier than ever to explain how shamefully the remaining prisoners – and especially the 87 cleared for release – have been abandoned by all three branches of the government. Now I need to step up my analysis of why the government’s supposed evidence is so untrustworthy …

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Investigative journalist, author, campaigner, commentator and public speaker. Recognized as an authority on Guantánamo and the “war on terror.” Co-founder, Close Guantánamo, co-director, We Stand With Shaker. Also, singer and songwriter (The Four Fathers) and photographer. Email Andy Worthington